Sub-clinical effects of chronic noise exposure on vestibular system
Date
2020Author
Viola, Pasquale
Scarpa, Alfonso
Pisani, Davide
Petrolo, Claudio
Aragona, Teodoro
Spadera, Lucrezia
De Luca, Pietro
Gioacchini, Federico Maria
Ralli, Massimo
Cassandro, Ettore
Cassandro, Claudia
Chiarella, Giuseppe
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Aim: to investigate the effect of chronic noise
exposure on vestibular function of subjects without
clinical evidence of vestibular disorders and with
documented cochlear damage from noise.
Subjects and methods: 25 patients with chronic noiseinduced hearing loss (NIHL) and without vestibular
complaints (group A) and 25 matched controls with
sensorineural hearing loss without noise exposure (group
B), underwent audiological and vestibular test including
caloric and cervical vestibular-evoked myogenic
potentials tests (cVEMPs).
Results: In subjects chronically exposed to noise,
similarly to that of the auditory threshold, an increase in
the evocation threshold of VEMPs has been documented,
statistically significant (p<0,05) and independent of the
performance of the auditory threshold. p1-n1 amplitude
values showed a significant difference between group A
and group B. No significant difference for p1-n1 latencies
between the two groups was found.
Conclusion: We have documented the possibility of
vestibular lesion, along with cochlear damage, related to
chronic acoustic trauma.